Forming a manipulated image using a printed medium having an image manipulation instruction

ABSTRACT

A camera for creating a manipulated image. The camera has an image capture device, an input device, an image manipulator, an output device and a display device. The image capture device is designed to capture a captured image. The input device is designed to receive an input image. The image manipulator is designed to receive the input image from the input device and to manipulate the input image to form a manipulated image. The output device is designed to receive the manipulated image from the image manipulator and to output the manipulated image. The display device is designed to receive the manipulated image from the image manipulator and to display the manipulated image. The image manipulator is designed to manipulate the input image by combining at least part of the input image with at least part of the captured image to form the manipulated image.

CROSS REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/112,757 filed Jul. 10, 1998, now Issued U.S. Pat. No. 6,624,848.

The following Australian provisional patent applications are hereby incorporated by cross-reference. For the purposes of location and identification, US patent applications identified by their US patent application serial numbers (USSN) are listed alongside the Australian applications from which the US patent applications claim the right of priority.

CROSS-REFERENCED U.S. Pat. No./PATENT APPLICATION AUSTRALIAN (CLAIMING RIGHT OF PRIORITY FROM PROVISIONAL PATENT AUSTRALIAN PROVISIONAL APPLICATION NO. APPLICATION) PO7991 6750901 PO8505 6476863 PO7988 6788336 PO9395 6322181 PO8017 6597817 PO8014 6227648 PO8025 6727948 PO8032 6690419 PO7999 6727951 PO8030 6196541 PO7997 6195150 PO7979 6362868 PO7978 6831681 PO7982 6431669 PO7989 6362869 PO8019 6472052 PO7980 6356715 PO8018 6894694 PO7938 6636216 PO8016 6366693 PO8024 6329990 PO7939 6459495 PO8501 6137500 PO8500 6690416 PO7987 7050143 PO8022 6398328 PO8497 7110024 PO8020 6431704 PO8504 6879341 PO8000 6415054 PO7934 6665454 PO7990 6542645 PO8499 6486886 PO8502 6381361 PO7981 6317192 PO7986 6850274 PO7983 09/113054 PO8026 6646757 PO8028 6624848 PO9394 6357135 PO9397 6271931 PO9398 6353772 PO9399 6106147 PO9400 6665008 PO9401 6304291 PO9403 6305770 PO9405 6289262 PP0959 6315200 PP1397 6217165 PP2370 6786420 PO8003 6350023 PO8005 6318849 PO8066 6227652 PO8072 6213588 PO8040 6213589 PO8071 6231163 PO8047 6247795 PO8035 6394581 PO8044 6244691 PO8063 6257704 PO8057 6416168 PO8056 6220694 PO8069 6257705 PO8049 6247794 PO8036 6234610 PO8048 6247793 PO8070 6264306 PO8067 6241342 PO8001 6247792 PO8038 6264307 PO8033 6254220 PO8002 6234611 PO8068 6302528 PO8062 6283582 PO8034 6239821 PO8039 6338547 PO8041 6247796 PO8004 6557977 PO8037 6390603 PO8043 6362843 PO8042 6293653 PO8064 6312107 PO9389 6227653 PO9391 6234609 PP0888 6238040 PP0891 6188415 PP0890 6227654 PP0873 6209989 PP0993 6247791 PP0890 6336710 PP1398 6217153 PP2592 6416167 PP2593 6243113 PP3991 6283581 PP3987 6247790 PP3985 6260953 PP3983 6267469 PO7935 6224780 PO7936 6235212 PO7937 6280643 PO8061 6284147 PO8054 6214244 PO8065 6071750 PO8055 6267905 PO8053 6251298 PO8078 6258285 PO7933 6225138 PO7950 6241904 PO7949 6299786 PO8060 6866789 PO8059 6231773 PO8073 6190931 PO8076 6248249 PO8075 6290862 PO8079 6241906 PO8050 6565762 PO8052 6241905 PO7948 6451216 PO7951 6231772 PO8074 6274056 PO7941 6290861 PO8077 6248248 PO8058 6306671 PO8051 6331258 PO8045 6110754 PO7952 6294101 PO8046 6416679 PO9390 6264849 PO9392 6254793 PP0889 6235211 PP0887 6491833 PP0882 6264850 PP0874 6258284 PP1396 6312615 PP3989 6228668 PP2591 6180427 PP3990 6171875 PP3986 6267904 PP3984 6245247 PP3982 6315914 PP0895 6231148 PP0869 6293658 PP0887 6614560 PP0885 6238033 PP0884 6312070 PP0886 6238111 PP0877 6378970 PP0878 6196739 PP0883 6270182 PP0880 6152619 PO8006 6087638 PO8007 6340222 PO8010 6041600 PO8011 6299300 PO7947 6067797 PO7944 6286935 PO7946 6044646 PP0894 6382769

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

Not applicable.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a data processing method and apparatus and, in particular, discloses a Multi Artcam System.

The present invention further relates to the field of image processing and to user interface mechanisms for performing image processing.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Recently, in Australia Provisional Patent Specification entitled “Image Processing Method and Apparatus (Art01)” filed concurrently by the present applicant, a system has been proposed known colloquially as “Artcam” which is a digital camera having an integral printer for printing out sensed images in addition to manipulations of the sensed image which are manipulated as a result of the insertion of a “Artcard” having manipulation instructions thereon into the camera.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention to provide for a multi effect system to provide enhanced image effects.

In accordance with the first aspect of the present invention as provided a method of creating a manipulated image comprising interconnecting a series of camera manipulation units, each of said camera manipulation unit applying an image manipulation to an inputted image so as to produce a manipulated output image, an initial one of said camera manipulation units sensing an image from an environment and at least a final one of said camera manipulation units producing a permanent output image.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Notwithstanding any other forms which may fall within the scope of the present invention, preferred forms of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings which:

FIG. 1 illustrates the form of interconnection of the preferred embodiment.

DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED AND OTHER EMBODIMENTS

The preferred embodiment is preferable implemented through suitable programming of a hand held camera device such as that described in Australian Provisional Patent Application entitled “Image Processing Method and Apparatus (ART01)” filed concurrently herewith by the present applicant the content of which is hereby specifically incorporated by cross reference.

The aforementioned patent specification discloses a camera system, hereinafter known as an “Artcam” type camera, wherein sensed images can be directly printed out by an Artcam portable camera unit. Further, the aforementioned specification discloses means and methods for performing various manipulations on images captured by the camera sensing device leading to the production of various effects in any output image. The manipulations are disclosed to be highly flexible in nature and can be implemented through the insertion into the Artcam of cards having encoded thereon various instructions for the manipulation of images, the cards hereinafter being known as Artcards. The Artcam further has significant onboard processing power by an Artcam Central Processor unit (ACP) which is interconnected to a memory device for the storage of important data and images.

In the preferred embodiment, multiple Artcams as described in the aforementioned patent specification are interconnected via their USB ports so as to provide a cascading of imaging effects. Through suitable programming of the internal computer portions of each Artcam, a cascading of imaging effects can be achieved.

The preferred arrangement is as illustrated in FIG. 1 wherein a series of Artcams, e.g. 2, 3, 4, are interconnected 5 via their USB ports. Each Artcam 2, 3, 4 is provided with a corresponding Artcard 7, 8, 9 having a suitable image manipulation program stored thereon. Further, the instructions for utilisation in a network environment can be provided on the Artcard 7, 8, 9. The image 10 sensed by the Artcam 2 is then manipulated by the manipulation program on Artcard 7 with the result being forwarded 5 to Artcam device 3 which applies the image manipulation function provided on Artcard 8 producing a corresponding output which is forwarded to the next Artcam in the series. The chained Artcam has been modified so as to have two USB ports for this purpose. The final Artcam 4 applies its Artcard manipulation stored on Artcard 9 for producing output 12 which is a conglomeration of each of the previous image manipulations.

The arrangement 1 on FIG. 1 thereby provides the opportunity to apply multiple effects to a single sensed image. Of course, a number of further refinements are possible. For example, each Artcam could print out its own manipulated image in addition to forwarding the image to the next Artcam in the series. Additionally, splitting of paths where one Artcam outputs to two different downstream Artcams which result in different final images being output could also be provided. Additionally, loops, etc., could be utilised.

It would be appreciated by a person skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the present invention as shown in the specific embodiment without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as broadly described. The present embodiment is, therefore, to be considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restrictive.

Ink Jet Technologies

The embodiments of the invention use an ink jet printer type device. Of course many different devices could be used. However presently popular ink jet printing technologies are unlikely to be suitable.

The most significant problem with thermal ink jet is power consumption. This is approximately 100 times that required for high speed, and stems from the energy-inefficient means of drop ejection. This involves the rapid boiling of water to produce a vapor bubble which expels the ink. Water has a very high heat capacity, and must be superheated in thermal ink jet applications. This leads to an efficiency of around 0.02%, from electricity input to drop momentum (and increased surface area) out.

The most significant problem with piezoelectric ink jet is size and cost. Piezoelectric crystals have a very small deflection at reasonable drive voltages, and therefore require a large area for each nozzle. Also, each piezoelectric actuator must be connected to its drive circuit on a separate substrate. This is not a significant problem at the current limit of around 300 nozzles per print head, but is a major impediment to the fabrication of pagewide print heads with 19,200 nozzles.

Ideally, the ink jet technologies used meet the stringent requirements of in-camera digital color printing and other high quality, high speed, low cost printing applications. To meet the requirements of digital photography, new ink jet technologies have been created. The target features include:

low power (less than 10 Watts)

high resolution capability (1,600 dpi or more)

photographic quality output

low manufacturing cost

small size (pagewidth times minimum cross section)

high speed (<2 seconds per page).

All of these features can be met or exceeded by the ink jet systems described below with differing levels of difficulty. 45 different ink jet technologies have been developed by the Assignee to give a wide range of choices for high volume manufacture. These technologies form part of separate applications assigned to the present Assignee as set out in the table below.

The ink jet designs shown here are suitable for a wide range of digital printing systems, from battery powered one-time use digital cameras, through to desktop and network printers, and through to commercial printing systems

For ease of manufacture using standard process equipment, the print head is designed to be a monolithic 0.5 micron CMOS chip with MEMS post processing. For color photographic applications, the print head is 100 mm long, with a width which depends upon the ink jet type. The smallest print head designed is IJ38, which is 0.35 mm wide, giving a chip area of 35 square mm. The print heads each contain 19,200 nozzles plus data and control circuitry.

Ink is supplied to the back of the print head by injection molded plastic ink channels. The molding requires 50 micron features, which can be created using a lithographically micromachined insert in a standard injection molding tool. Ink flows through holes etched through the wafer to the nozzle chambers fabricated on the front surface of the wafer. The print head is connected to the camera circuitry by tape automated bonding.

Tables of Drop-On-Demand Ink Jets

Eleven important characteristics of the fundamental operation of individual ink jet nozzles have been identified. These characteristics are largely orthogonal, and so can be elucidated as an eleven dimensional matrix. Most of the eleven axes of this matrix include entries developed by the present assignee.

The following tables form the axes of an eleven dimensional table of ink jet types.

Actuator mechanism (18 types)

Basic operation mode (7 types)

Auxiliary mechanism (8 types)

Actuator amplification or modification method (17 types)

Actuator motion (19 types)

Nozzle refill method (4 types)

Method of restricting back-flow through inlet (10 types)

Nozzle clearing method (9 types)

Nozzle plate construction (9 types)

Drop ejection direction (5 types)

Ink type (7 types)

The complete eleven dimensional table represented by these axes contains 36.9 billion possible configurations of ink jet nozzle. While not all of the possible combinations result in a viable ink jet technology, many million configurations are viable. It is clearly impractical to elucidate all of the possible configurations. Instead, certain ink jet types have been investigated in detail. These are designated IJ01 to IJ45 above.

Other ink jet configurations can readily be derived from these 45 examples by substituting alternative configurations along one or more of the 11 axes. Most of the IJ01 to IJ45 examples can be made into ink jet print heads with characteristics superior to any currently available ink jet technology.

Where there are prior art examples known to the inventor, one or more of these examples are listed in the examples column of the tables below. The IJ01 to IJ45 series are also listed in the examples column. In some cases, a printer may be listed more than once in a table, where it shares characteristics with more than one entry.

Suitable applications for the ink jet technologies include: Home printers, Office network printers, Short run digital printers, Commercial print systems, Fabric printers, Pocket printers, Internet WWW printers, Video printers, Medical imaging, Wide format printers, Notebook PC printers, Fax machines, Industrial printing systems, Photocopiers, Photographic minilabs etc.

The information associated with the aforementioned 11 dimensional matrix are set out in the following tables.

Description Advantages Disadvantages Examples ACTUATOR MECHANISM (APPLIED ONLY TO SELECTED INK DROPS) Thermal An electrothermal Large force High power Canon bubble heater heats the generated Ink carrier Bubblejet 1979 ink to above Simple limited to water Endo et al GB boiling point, construction Low patent 2,007,162 transferring No moving efficiency Xerox significant heat to parts High heater-in-pit the aqueous ink. A Fast temperatures 1990 Hawkins et bubble nucleates operation required al U.S. Pat. No. and quickly forms, Small chip High 4,899,181 expelling the ink. area required for mechanical Hewlett- The efficiency of actuator stress Packard TIJ the process is low, Unusual 1982 Vaught et with typically less materials al U.S. Pat. No. than 0.05% of the required 4,490,728 electrical energy Large drive being transformed transistors into kinetic energy Cavitation of the drop. causes actuator failure Kogation reduces bubble formation Large print heads are difficult to fabricate Piezoelectric A piezoelectric Low power Very large Kyser et al crystal such as consumption area required for U.S. Pat. No. lead lanthanum Many ink actuator 3,946,398 zirconate (PZT) is types can be Difficult to Zoltan electrically used integrate with U.S. Pat. No. activated, and Fast electronics 3,683,212 either expands, operation High 1973 shears, or bends to High voltage drive Stemme U.S. Pat. No. apply pressure to efficiency transistors 3,747,120 the ink, ejecting required Epson Stylus drops. Full Tektronix pagewidth print IJ04 heads impractical due to actuator size Requires electrical poling in high field strengths during manufacture Electrostrictive An electric field is Low power Low Seiko used to activate consumption maximum strain Epson, Usui et electrostriction in Many ink (approx. 0.01%) all JP 253401/96 relaxor materials types can be Large area IJ04 such as lead used required for lanthanum Low actuator due to zirconate titanate thermal low strain (PLZT) or lead expansion Response magnesium Electric speed is niobate (PMN). field strength marginal (~10 μs) required High (approx. 3.5 V/μm) voltage drive can be transistors generated required without Full difficulty pagewidth print Does not heads require electrical impractical due poling to actuator size Ferroelectric An electric field is Low power Difficult to IJ04 used to induce a consumption integrate with phase transition Many ink electronics between the types can be Unusual antiferroelectric used materials such as (AFE) and Fast PLZSnT are ferroelectric (FE) operation (<1 μs) required phase. Perovskite Relatively Actuators materials such as high longitudinal require a large tin modified lead strain area lanthanum High zirconate titanate efficiency (PLZSnT) exhibit Electric large strains of up field strength of to 1% associated around 3 V/μm with the AFE to can be readily FE phase provided transition. Electrostatic Conductive plates Low power Difficult to IJ02, IJ04 plates are separated by a consumption operate compressible or Many ink electrostatic fluid dielectric types can be devices in an (usually air). Upon used aqueous application of a Fast environment voltage, the plates operation The attract each other electrostatic and displace ink, actuator will causing drop normally need to ejection. The be separated conductive plates from the ink may be in a comb Very large or honeycomb area required to structure, or achieve high stacked to increase forces the surface area High and therefore the voltage drive force. transistors may be required Full pagewidth print heads are not competitive due to actuator size Electro- A strong electric Low current High 1989 Saito static pull field is applied to consumption voltage required et al, U.S. Pat. No. on ink the ink, whereupon Low May be 4,799,068 electrostatic temperature damaged by 1989 Miura attraction sparks due to air et al, U.S. Pat. No. accelerates the ink breakdown 4,810,954 towards the print Required Tone-jet medium. field strength increases as the drop size decreases High voltage drive transistors required Electrostatic field attracts dust Permanent An electromagnet Low power Complex 1J07, IJ10 magnet directly attracts a consumption fabrication electro- permanent magnet, Many ink Permanent magnetic displacing ink and types can be magnetic causing drop used material such as ejection. Rare Fast Neodymium Iron earth magnets with operation Boron (NdFeB) a field strength High required. around 1 Tesla can efficiency High local be used. Examples Easy currents required are: Samarium extension from Copper Cobalt (SaCo) and single nozzles to metalization magnetic materials pagewidth print should be used in the neodymium heads for long iron boron family electromigration (NdFeB, lifetime and low NdDyFeBNb, resistivity NdDyFeB, etc) Pigmented inks are usually infeasible Operating temperature limited to the Curie temperature (around 540 K.) Soft A solenoid Low power Complex IJ01, 1J05, magnetic induced a consumption fabrication 1J08, IJ10, 1J12, core magnetic field in a Many ink Materials 1J14, 1J15, 1J17 electro- soft magnetic core types can be not usually magnetic or yoke fabricated used present in a from a ferrous Fast CMOS fab such material such as operation as NiFe, electroplated iron High CoNiFe, or CoFe alloys such as efficiency are required CoNiFe [1], CoFe, Easy High local or NiFe alloys, extension from currents required Typically, the soft single nozzles to Copper magnetic material pagewidth print metalization is in two parts, heads should be used which are for long normally held electromigration apart by a spring. lifetime and low When the solenoid resistivity is actuated, the two Electroplating parts attract, is required displacing the ink. High saturation flux density is required (2.0-2.1 T is achievable with CoNiFe [1]) Lorenz The Lorenz force Low power Force acts 1J06, 1J11, force acting on a current consumption as a twisting 1J13, 1J16 carrying wire in a Many ink motion magnetic field is types can be Typically, utilized, used only a quarter of This allows the Fast the solenoid magnetic field to operation length provides be supplied High force in a useful externally to the efficiency direction print head, for Easy High local example with rare extension from currents required earth permanent single nozzles to Copper magnets. pagewidth print metalization Only the current heads should be used carrying wire need for long be fabricated on electromigration the print-head, lifetime and low simplifying resistivity materials Pigmented requirements. inks are usually infeasible Magneto- The actuator uses Many ink Force acts Fischenbeck, striction the giant types can be as a twisting U.S. Pat. No. magnetostrictive used motion 4,032,929 effect of materials Fast Unusual 1J25 such as Terfenol-D operation materials such as (an alloy of Easy Terfenol-D are terbium, extension from required dysprosium and single nozzles to High local iron developed at pagewidth print currents required the Naval heads Copper Ordnance High force metalization Laboratory, hence is available should be used Ter-Fe-NOL). For for long best efficiency, the electromigration actuator should be lifetime and low pre-stressed to resistivity approx. 8 MPa. Pre- stressing may be required Surface Ink under positive Low power Requires Silverbrook, tension pressure is held in consumption supplementary EP 0771 658 A2 reduction a nozzle by surface Simple force to effect and related tension. The construction drop separation patent surface tension of No unusual Requires applications the ink is reduced materials special ink below the bubble required in surfactants threshold, causing fabrication Speed may the ink to egress High be limited by from the nozzle. efficiency surfactant Easy properties extension from single nozzles to pagewidth print heads Viscosity The ink viscosity Simple Requires Silverbrook, reduction is locally reduced construction supplementary EP 0771 658 A2 to select which No unusual force to effect and related drops are to be materials drop separation patent ejected. A required in Requires applications viscosity reduction fabrication special ink can be achieved Easy viscosity electrothermally extension from properties with most inks, but single nozzles to High speed special inks can be pagewidth print is difficult to engineered for a heads achieve 100:1 viscosity Requires reduction. oscillating ink pressure A high temperature difference (typically 80 degrees) is required Acoustic An acoustic wave Can operate Complex 1993 is generated and without a nozzle drive circuitry Hadimioglu et focussed upon the plate Complex al, EUP 550,192 drop ejection fabrication 1993 Elrod region. Low et al, EUP efficiency 572,220 Poor control of drop position Poor control of drop volume Thermoelastic An actuator which Low power Efficient IJ03, IJ09, bend relies upon consumption aqueous IJ17, IJ18, IJ19, actuator differential Many ink operation IJ20, IJ21, IJ22, thermal expansion types can be requires a IJ23, IJ24, IJ27, upon Joule heating used thermal insulator IJ28, IJ29, IJ30, is used. Simple on the hot side IJ31, IJ32, IJ33, planar Corrosion IJ34, IJ35, IJ36, fabrication prevention can IJ37, IJ38, IJ39, Small chip be difficult IJ40, IJ41 area required for Pigmented each actuator inks may be Fast infeasible, as operation pigment particles High may jam the efficiency bend actuator CMOS compatible voltages and currents Standard MEMS processes can be used Easy extension from single nozzles to pagewidth print heads High CTE A material with a High force Requires IJ09, IJ17, thermoelastic very high can be generated special material IJ18, IJ20, IJ21, actuator coefficient of Three (e.g. PTFE) IJ22, IJ23, IJ24, thermal expansion methods of Requires a IJ27, IJ28, IJ29, (CTE) such as PTFE deposition PTFE deposition IJ30, IJ31, IJ42, polytetrafluoroethylene are under process, which is IJ43, IJ44 (PTFE) is development: not yet standard used. As high CTE chemical vapor in ULSI fabs materials are deposition PTFE usually non- (CVD), spin deposition conductive, a coating, and cannot be heater fabricated evaporation followed with from a conductive PTFE is a high temperature material is candidate for (above 350° C.) incorporated. A 50 μm low dielectric processing long PTFE constant Pigmented bend actuator with insulation in inks may be polysilicon heater ULSI infeasible, as and 15 mW power Very low pigment particles input can provide power may jam the 180 μN force and consumption bend actuator 10 μm deflection. Many ink Actuator motions types can be include: used Bend Simple Push planar Buckle fabrication Rotate Small chip area required for each actuator Fast operation High efficiency CMOS compatible voltages and currents Easy extension from single nozzles to pagewidth print heads Conductive A polymer with a High force Requires IJ24 polymer high coefficient of can be generated special materials thermoelastic thermal expansion Very low development actuator (such as PTFE) is power (High CTE doped with consumption conductive conducting Many ink polymer) substances to types can be Requires a increase its used PTFE deposition conductivity to Simple process, which is about 3 orders of planar not yet standard magnitude below fabrication in ULSI fabs that of copper. The Small chip PTFE conducting area required for deposition polymer expands each actuator cannot be when resistively Fast followed with heated. operation high temperature Examples of High (above 350° C.) conducting efficiency processing dopants include: CMOS Evaporation Carbon nanotubes compatible and CVD Metal fibers voltages and deposition Conductive currents techniques polymers such as Easy cannot be used doped extension from Pigmented polythiophene single nozzles to inks may be Carbon granules pagewidth print infeasible, as heads pigment particles may jam the bend actuator Shape A shape memory High force Fatigue IJ26 memory alloy such as TiNi is available limits maximum alloy (also known as (stresses of number of cycles Nitinol —Nickel hundreds of Low strain Titanium alloy MPa) (1%) is required developed at the Large strain to extend fatigue Naval Ordnance is available resistance Laboratory) is (more than 3%) Cycle rate thermally switched High limited by heat between its weak corrosion removal martensitic state resistance Requires and its high Simple unusual stiffness austenic construction materials (TiNi) state. The shape of Easy The latent the actuator in its extension from heat of martensitic state is single nozzles to transformation deformed relative pagewidth print must be to the austenic heads provided shape. The shape Low High change causes voltage current operation ejection of a drop. operation Requires pre-stressing to distort the martensitic state Linear Linear magnetic Linear Requires IJ12 Magnetic actuators include Magnetic unusual Actuator the Linear actuators can be semiconductor Induction Actuator constructed with materials such as (LIA), Linear high thrust, long soft magnetic Permanent Magnet travel, and high alloys (e.g. Synchronous efficiency using CoNiFe) Actuator planar Some (LPMSA), Linear semiconductor varieties also Reluctance fabrication require Synchronous techniques permanent Actuator (LRSA), Long magnetic Linear Switched actuator travel is materials such as Reluctance available Neodymium iron Actuator (LSRA), Medium boron (NdFeB) and the Linear force is available Requires Stepper Actuator Low complex multiphase (LSA). voltage drive operation circuitry High current operation BASIC OPERATION MODE Actuator This is the Simple Drop Thermal ink directly simplest mode of operation repetition rate is jet pushes operation: the No external usually limited Piezoelectric ink actuator directly fields required to around 10 kHz. ink jet supplies sufficient Satellite However, IJ01, IJ02, kinetic energy to drops can be this is not IJ03, IJ04, IJ05, expel the drop. avoided if drop fundamental to IJ06, IJ07, IJ09, The drop must velocity is less the method, but IJ11, IJ12, IJ14, have a sufficient than 4 m/s is related to the IJ16, IJ20, IJ22, velocity to Can be refill method IJ23, IJ24, IJ25, overcome the efficient, normally used IJ26, IJ27, IJ28, surface tension. depending upon All of the IJ29, IJ30, IJ31, the actuator used drop kinetic IJ32, IJ33, IJ34, energy must be IJ35, IJ36, IJ37, provided by the IJ38, IJ39, IJ40, actuator IJ41, IJ42, IJ43, Satellite IJ44 drops usually form if drop velocity is greater than 4.5 m/s Proximity The drops to be Very simple Requires Silverbrook, printed are print head close proximity EP 0771 658 A2 selected by some fabrication can between the and related manner (e.g. be used print head and patent thermally induced The drop the print media applications surface tension selection means or transfer roller reduction of does not need to May require pressurized ink). provide the two print heads Selected drops are energy required printing alternate separated from the to separate the rows of the ink in the nozzle drop from the image by contact with the nozzle Monolithic print medium or a color print heads transfer roller. are difficult Electrostatic The drops to be Very simple Requires Silverbrook, pull printed are print head very high EP 0771 658 A2 on ink selected by some fabrication can electrostatic field and related manner (e.g. be used Electrostatic patent thermally induced The drop field for small applications surface tension selection means nozzle sizes is Tone-Jet reduction of does not need to above air pressurized ink). provide the breakdown Selected drops are energy required Electrostatic separated from the to separate the field may ink in the nozzle drop from the attract dust by a strong electric nozzle field. Magnetic The drops to be Very simple Requires Silverbrook, pull on printed are print head magnetic ink EP 0771 658 A2 ink selected by some fabrication can Ink colors and related manner (e.g. be used other than black patent thermally induced The drop are difficult applications surface tension selection means Requires reduction of does not need to very high pressurized ink). provide the magnetic fields Selected drops are energy required separated from the to separate the ink in the nozzle drop from the by a strong nozzle magnetic field acting on the magnetic ink. Shutter The actuator High speed Moving IJ13, IJ17, moves a shutter to (>50 kHz) parts are IJ21 block ink flow to operation can be required the nozzle. The ink achieved due to Requires pressure is pulsed reduced refill ink pressure at a multiple of the time modulator drop ejection Drop timing Friction and frequency. can be very wear must be accurate considered The Stiction is actuator energy possible can be very low Shuttered The actuator Actuators Moving IJ08, IJ15, grill moves a shutter to with small travel parts are IJ18, IJ19 block ink flow can be used required through a grill to Actuators Requires the nozzle. The with small force ink pressure shutter movement can be used modulator need only be equal High speed Friction and to the width of the (>50 kHz) wear must be grill holes. operation can be considered achieved Stiction is possible Pulsed A pulsed magnetic Extremely Requires an IJ10 magnetic field attracts an low energy external pulsed pull on ‘ink pusher’ at the operation is magnetic field ink drop ejection possible Requires pusher frequency. An No heat special materials actuator controls a dissipation for both the catch, which problems actuator and the prevents the ink ink pusher pusher from Complex moving when a construction drop is not to be ejected. AUXILIARY MECHANISM (APPLIED TO ALL NOZZLES) None The actuator Simplicity Drop Most ink directly fires the of construction ejection energy jets, including ink drop, and there Simplicity must be supplied piezoelectric and is no external field of operation by individual thermal bubble. or other Small nozzle actuator IJ01, IJ02, mechanism physical size IJ03, IJ04, IJ05, required. IJ07, IJ09, IJ11, IJ12, IJ14, IJ20, IJ22, IJ23, IJ24, IJ25, IJ26, IJ27, IJ28, IJ29, IJ30, IJ31, IJ32, IJ33, IJ34, IJ35, IJ36, IJ37, IJ38, IJ39, IJ40, IJ41, IJ42, IJ43, IJ44 Oscillating The ink pressure Oscillating Requires Silverbrook, ink oscillates, ink pressure can external ink EP 0771 658 A2 pressure providing much of provide a refill pressure and related (including the drop ejection pulse, allowing oscillator patent acoustic energy. The higher operating Ink pressure applications stimulation) actuator selects speed phase and IJ08, IJ13, which drops are to The amplitude must IJ15, IJ17, IJ18, be fired by actuators may be carefully IJ19, IJ21 selectively operate with controlled blocking or much lower Acoustic enabling nozzles. energy reflections in the The ink pressure Acoustic ink chamber oscillation may be lenses can be must be achieved by used to focus the designed for vibrating the print sound on the head, or preferably nozzles by an actuator in the ink supply. Media The print head is Low power Precision Silverbrook, proximity placed in close High assembly EP 0771 658 A2 proximity to the accuracy required and related print medium. Simple print Paper fibers patent Selected drops head may cause applications protrude from the construction problems print head further Cannot than unselected print on rough drops, and contact substrates the print medium. The drop soaks into the medium fast enough to cause drop separation. Transfer Drops are printed High Bulky Silverbrook, roller to a transfer roller accuracy Expensive EP 0771 658 A2 instead of straight Wide range Complex and related to the print of print construction patent medium. A substrates can be applications transfer roller can used Tektronix also be used for Ink can be hot melt proximity drop dried on the piezoelectric ink separation. transfer roller jet Any of the IJ series Electrostatic An electric field is Low power Field Silverbrook, used to accelerate Simple print strength required EP 0771 658 A2 selected drops head for separation of and related towards the print construction small drops is patent medium. near or above air applications breakdown Tone-Jet Direct A magnetic field is Low power Requires Silverbrook, magnetic used to accelerate Simple print magnetic ink EP 0771 658 A2 field selected drops of head Requires and related magnetic ink construction strong magnetic patent towards the print field applications medium. Cross The print head is Does not Requires IJ06, IJ16 magnetic placed in a require magnetic external magnet field constant magnetic materials to be Current field. The Lorenz integrated in the densities may be force in a current print head high, resulting in carrying wire is manufacturing electromigration used to move the process problems actuator. Pulsed A pulsed magnetic Very low Complex IJ10 magnetic field is used to power operation print head field cyclically attract a is possible construction paddle, which Small print Magnetic pushes on the ink. head size materials A small actuator required in print moves a catch, head which selectively prevents the paddle from moving. ACTUATOR AMPLIFICATION OR MODIFICATION METHOD None No actuator Operational Many Thermal mechanical simplicity actuator Bubble Ink jet amplification is mechanisms IJ01, IJ02, used. The actuator have insufficient IJ06, IJ07, IJ16, directly drives the travel, or IJ25, IJ26 drop ejection insufficient process. force, to efficiently drive the drop ejection process Differential An actuator Provides High Piezoelectric expansion material expands greater travel in stresses are IJ03, IJ09, bend more on one side a reduced print involved IJ17, IJ18, IJ19, actuator than on the other. head area Care must IJ20, IJ21, IJ22, The expansion be taken that the IJ23, IJ24, IJ27, may be thermal, materials do not IJ29, IJ30, IJ31, piezoelectric, delaminate IJ32, IJ33, IJ34, magnetostrictive, Residual IJ35, IJ36, IJ37, or other bend resulting IJ38, IJ39, IJ42, mechanism. The from high IJ43, IJ44 bend actuator temperature or converts a high high stress force low travel during formation actuator mechanism to high travel, lower force mechanism. Transient A trilayer bend Very good High IJ40, IJ41 bend actuator where the temperature stresses are actuator two outside layers stability involved are identical. This High speed, Care must cancels bend due as a new drop be taken that the to ambient can be fired materials do not temperature and before heat delaminate residual stress. The dissipates actuator only Cancels responds to residual stress of transient heating of formation one side or the other. Reverse The actuator loads Better Fabrication IJ05, IJ11 spring a spring. When the coupling to the complexity actuator is turned ink High stress off, the spring in the spring releases. This can reverse the force/distance curve of the actuator to make it compatible with the force/time requirements of the drop ejection. Actuator A series of thin Increased Increased Some stack actuators are travel fabrication piezoelectric ink stacked. This can Reduced complexity jets be appropriate drive voltage Increased IJ04 where actuators possibility of require high short circuits due electric field to pinholes strength, such as electrostatic and piezoelectric actuators. Multiple Multiple smaller Increases Actuator IJ12, IJ13, actuators actuators are used the force forces may not IJ18, IJ20, IJ22, simultaneously to available from add linearly, IJ28, IJ42, IJ43 move the ink. Each an actuator reducing actuator need Multiple efficiency provide only a actuators can be portion of the positioned to force required. control ink flow accurately Linear A linear spring is Matches Requires IJ15 Spring used to transform a low travel print head area motion with small actuator with for the spring travel and high higher travel force into a longer requirements travel, lower force Non-contact motion. method of motion transformation Coiled A bend actuator is Increases Generally IJ17, IJ21, actuator coiled to provide travel restricted to IJ34, IJ35 greater travel in a Reduces planar reduced chip area. chip area implementations Planar due to extreme implementations fabrication are relatively difficulty in easy to fabricate. other orientations. Flexure A bend actuator Simple Care must IJ10, IJ19, bend has a small region means of be taken not to IJ33 actuator near the fixture increasing travel exceed the point, which flexes of a bend elastic limit in much more readily actuator the flexure area than the remainder Stress of the actuator. distribution is The actuator very uneven flexing is Difficult to effectively accurately model converted from an with finite even coiling to an element analysis angular bend, resulting in greater travel of the actuator tip. Catch The actuator Very low Complex IJ10 controls a small actuator energy construction catch. The catch Very small Requires either enables or actuator size external force disables movement Unsuitable of an ink pusher for pigmented that is controlled inks in a bulk manner. Gears Gears can be used Low force, Moving IJ13 to increase travel low travel parts are at the expense of actuators can be required duration. Circular used Several gears, rack and Can be actuator cycles pinion, ratchets, fabricated using are required and other gearing standard surface More methods can be MEMS complex drive used. processes electronics Complex construction Friction, friction, and wear are possible Buckle A buckle plate can Very fast Must stay S. Hirata et plate be used to change movement within elastic al, “An Ink-jet a slow actuator achievable limits of the Head Using into a fast motion. materials for Diaphragm It can also convert long device life Microactuator”, a high force, low High Proc. IEEE travel actuator into stresses involved MEMS, Feb. a high travel, Generally 1996, pp 418-423. medium force high power IJ18, IJ27 motion. requirement Tapered A tapered Linearizes Complex IJ14 magnetic magnetic pole can the magnetic construction pole increase travel at force/distance the expense of curve force. Lever A lever and Matches High stress IJ32, IJ36, fulcrum is used to low travel around the IJ37 transform a motion actuator with fulcrum with small travel higher travel and high force into requirements a motion with Fulcrum longer travel and area has no lower force. The linear lever can also movement, and reverse the can be used for a direction of travel, fluid seal Rotary The actuator is High Complex IJ28 impeller connected to a mechanical construction rotary impeller. A advantage Unsuitable small angular The ratio of for pigmented deflection of the force to travel of inks actuator results in the actuator can a rotation of the be matched to impeller vanes, the nozzle which push the ink requirements by against stationary varying the vanes and out of number of the nozzle. impeller vanes Acoustic A refractive or No moving Large area 1993 lens diffractive (e.g. parts required Hadimioglu et zone plate) Only al, EUP 550,192 acoustic lens is relevant for 1993 Elrod used to concentrate acoustic ink jets et al, EUP sound waves. 572,220 Sharp A sharp point is Simple Difficult to Tone-jet conductive used to concentrate construction fabricate using point an electrostatic standard VLSI field. processes for a surface ejecting ink-jet Only relevant for electrostatic ink jets ACTUATOR MOTION Volume The volume of the Simple High energy Hewlett- expansion actuator changes, construction in is typically Packard Thermal pushing the ink in the case of required to Ink jet all directions. thermal ink jet achieve volume Canon expansion. This Bubblejet leads to thermal stress, cavitation, and kogation in thermal ink jet implementations Linear, The actuator Efficient High IJ01, IJ02, normal to moves in a coupling to ink fabrication IJ04, IJ07, IJ11, chip direction normal to drops ejected complexity may IJ14 surface the print head normal to the be required to surface. The surface achieve nozzle is typically perpendicular in the line of motion movement. Parallel to The actuator Suitable for Fabrication IJ12, IJ13, chip moves parallel to planar complexity IJ15, IJ33, , IJ34, surface the print head fabrication Friction IJ35, IJ36 surface. Drop Stiction ejection may still be normal to the surface. Membrane An actuator with a The Fabrication 1982 push high force but effective area of complexity Howkins small area is used the actuator Actuator U.S. Pat. No. to push a stiff becomes the size 4,459,601 membrane that is membrane area Difficulty in contact with the of integration in ink. a VLSI process Rotary The actuator Rotary Device IJ05, IJ08, causes the rotation levers may be complexity IJ13, IJ28 of some element, used to increase May have such a grill or travel friction at a pivot impeller Small chip point area requirements Bend The actuator bends A very Requires 1970 Kyser when energized. small change in the actuator to be et al U.S. Pat. No. This may be due to dimensions can made from at 3,946,398 differential be converted to a least two distinct 1973 thermal expansion, large motion. layers, or to have Stemme U.S. Pat. No. piezoelectric a thermal 3,747,120 expansion, difference across IJ03, IJ09, magnetostriction, the actuator IJ10, IJ19, IJ23, or other form of IJ24, IJ25, IJ29, relative IJ30, IJ31, IJ33, dimensional IJ34, IJ35 change. Swivel The actuator Allows Inefficient IJ06 swivels around a operation where coupling to the central pivot. This the net linear ink motion motion is suitable force on the where there are paddle is zero opposite forces Small chip applied to opposite area sides of the paddle, requirements e.g. Lorenz force. Straighten The actuator is Can be used Requires IJ26, IJ32 normally bent, and with shape careful balance straightens when memory alloys of stresses to energized. where the ensure that the austenic phase is quiescent bend is planar accurate Double The actuator bends One Difficult to IJ36, IJ37, bend in one direction actuator can be make the drops IJ38 when one element used to power ejected by both is energized, and two nozzles. bend directions bends the other Reduced identical. way when another chip size. A small element is Not efficiency loss energized. sensitive to compared to ambient equivalent single temperature bend actuators. Shear Energizing the Can Not readily 1985 actuator causes a increase the applicable to Fishbeck shear motion in the effective travel other actuator U.S. Pat. No. actuator material. of piezoelectric mechanisms 4,584,590 actuators Radial The actuator Relatively High force 1970 Zoltan constriction squeezes an ink easy to fabricate required U.S. Pat. No. reservoir, forcing single nozzles Inefficient 3,683,212 ink from a from glass Difficult to constricted nozzle. tubing as integrate with macroscopic VLSI processes structures Coil/ A coiled actuator Easy to Difficult to IJ17, IJ21, uncoil uncoils or coils fabricate as a fabricate for IJ34, IJ35 more tightly. The planar VLSI non-planar motion of the free process devices end of the actuator Small area Poor out-of- ejects the ink. required, plane stiffness therefore low cost Bow The actuator bows Can Maximum IJ16, IJ18, (or buckles) in the increase the travel is IJ27 middle when speed of travel constrained energized. Mechanically High force rigid required Push-Pull Two actuators The Not readily IJ18 control a shutter. structure is suitable for ink One actuator pulls pinned at both jets which the shutter, and the ends, so has a directly push the other pushes it. high out-of- ink plane rigidity Curl A set of actuators Good fluid Design IJ20, IJ42 inwards curl inwards to flow to the complexity reduce the volume region behind of ink that they the actuator enclose. increases efficiency Curl A set of actuators Relatively Relatively IJ43 outwards curl outwards, simple large chip area pressurizing ink in construction a chamber surrounding the actuators, and expelling ink from a nozzle in the chamber. Iris Multiple vanes High High IJ22 enclose a volume efficiency fabrication of ink. These Small chip complexity simultaneously area Not suitable rotate, reducing for pigmented the volume inks between the vanes. Acoustic The actuator The Large area 1993 vibration vibrates at a high actuator can be required for Hadimioglu et frequency. physically efficient al, EUP 550,192 distant from the operation at 1993 Elrod ink useful et al, EUP frequencies 572,220 Acoustic coupling and crosstalk Complex drive circuitry Poor control of drop volume and position None In various ink jet No moving Various Silverbrook, designs the parts other tradeoffs EP 0771 658 A2 actuator does not are required to and related move. eliminate patent moving parts applications Tone-jet NOZZLE REFILL METHOD Surface This is the normal Fabrication Low speed Thermal ink tension way that ink jets simplicity Surface jet are refilled. After Operational tension force Piezoelectric the actuator is simplicity relatively small ink jet energized, it compared to IJ01-IJ07, typically returns actuator force IJ10-IJ14, IJ16, rapidly to its Long refill IJ20, IJ22-IJ45 normal position. time usually This rapid return dominates the sucks in air total repetition through the nozzle rate opening. The ink surface tension at the nozzle then exerts a small force restoring the meniscus to a minimum area. This force refills the nozzle. Shuttered Ink to the nozzle High speed Requires IJ08, IJ13, oscillating chamber is Low common ink IJ15, IJ17, IJ18, ink provided at a actuator energy, pressure IJ19, IJ21 pressure pressure that as the actuator oscillator oscillates at twice need only open May not be the drop ejection or close the suitable for frequency. When a shutter, instead pigmented inks drop is to be of ejecting the ejected, the shutter ink drop is opened for 3 half cycles: drop ejection, actuator return, and refill. The shutter is then closed to prevent the nozzle chamber emptying during the next negative pressure cycle. Refill After the main High speed, Requires IJ09 actuator actuator has as the nozzle is two independent ejected a drop a actively refilled actuators per second (refill) nozzle actuator is energized. The refill actuator pushes ink into the nozzle chamber. The refill actuator returns slowly, to prevent its return from emptying the chamber again. Positive The ink is held a High refill Surface Silverbrook, ink slight positive rate, therefore a spill must be EP 0771 658 A2 pressure pressure. After the high drop prevented and related ink drop is ejected, repetition rate is Highly patent the nozzle possible hydrophobic applications chamber fills print head Alternative quickly as surface surfaces are for:, IJ01-IJ07, tension and ink required IJ10-IJ14, IJ16, pressure both IJ20, IJ22-IJ45 operate to refill the nozzle. METHOD OF RESTRICTING BACK-FLOW THROUGH INLET Long inlet The ink inlet Design Restricts Thermal ink channel channel to the simplicity refill rate jet nozzle chamber is Operational May result Piezoelectric made long and simplicity in a relatively ink jet relatively narrow, Reduces large chip area IJ42, IJ43 relying on viscous crosstalk Only drag to reduce partially inlet back-flow. effective Positive The ink is under a Drop Requires a Silverbrook, ink positive pressure, selection and method (such as EP 0771 658 A2 pressure so that in the separation forces a nozzle rim or and related quiescent state can be reduced effective patent some of the ink Fast refill hydrophobizing, applications drop already time or both) to Possible protrudes from the prevent flooding operation of the nozzle. of the ejection following: IJ01-IJ07, This reduces the surface of the IJ09-IJ12, pressure in the print head. IJ14, IJ16, IJ20, nozzle chamber IJ22, IJ23-IJ34, which is required IJ36-IJ41, IJ44 to eject a certain volume of ink. The reduction in chamber pressure results in a reduction in ink pushed out through the inlet. Baffle One or more The refill Design HP Thermal baffles are placed rate is not as complexity Ink Jet in the inlet ink restricted as the May Tektronix flow. When the long inlet increase piezoelectric ink actuator is method. fabrication jet energized, the Reduces complexity (e.g. rapid ink crosstalk Tektronix hot movement creates melt eddies which Piezoelectric restrict the flow print heads). through the inlet. The slower refill process is unrestricted, and does not result in eddies. Flexible In this method Significantly Not Canon flap recently disclosed reduces back- applicable to restricts by Canon, the flow for edge- most ink jet inlet expanding actuator shooter thermal configurations (bubble) pushes on ink jet devices Increased a flexible flap that fabrication restricts the inlet. complexity Inelastic deformation of polymer flap results in creep over extended use Inlet filter A filter is located Additional Restricts IJ04, IJ12, between the ink advantage of ink refill rate IJ24, IJ27, IJ29, inlet and the filtration May result IJ30 nozzle chamber. Ink filter in complex The filter has a may be construction multitude of small fabricated with holes or slots, no additional restricting ink process steps flow. The filter also removes particles which may block the nozzle. Small The ink inlet Design Restricts IJ02, IJ37, inlet channel to the simplicity refill rate IJ44 compared nozzle chamber May result to nozzle has a substantially in a relatively smaller cross large chip area section than that of Only the nozzle, partially resulting in easier effective ink egress out of the nozzle than out of the inlet. Inlet A secondary Increases Requires IJ09 shutter actuator controls speed of the ink- separate refill the position of a jet print head actuator and shutter, closing off operation drive circuit the ink inlet when the main actuator is energized. The inlet The method avoids Back-flow Requires IJ01, IJ03, is located the problem of problem is careful design to IJ05, IJ06, IJ07, behind inlet back-flow by eliminated minimize the IJ10, IJ11, IJ14, the ink- arranging the ink- negative IJ16, IJ22, IJ23, pushing pushing surface of pressure behind IJ25, IJ28, IJ31, surface the actuator the paddle IJ32, IJ33, IJ34, between the inlet IJ35, IJ36, IJ39, and the nozzle. IJ40, IJ41 Part of The actuator and a Significant Small IJ07, IJ20, the wall of the ink reductions in increase in IJ26, IJ38 actuator chamber are back-flow can be fabrication moves to arranged so that achieved complexity shut off the motion of the Compact the inlet actuator closes off designs possible the inlet. Nozzle In some Ink back- None Silverbrook, actuator configurations of flow problem is related to ink EP 0771 658 A2 does not ink jet, there is no eliminated back-flow on and related result in expansion or actuation patent ink back- movement of an applications flow actuator which Valve-jet may cause ink Tone-jet back-flow through the inlet. NOZZLE CLEARING METHOD Normal All of the nozzles No added May not be Most ink jet nozzle are fired complexity on sufficient to systems firing periodically, the print head displace dried IJ01, IJ02, before the ink has ink IJ03, IJ04, IJ05, a chance to dry. IJ06, IJ07, IJ09, When not in use IJ10, IJ11, IJ12, the nozzles are IJ14, IJ16, IJ20, sealed (capped) IJ22, IJ23, IJ24, against air. IJ25, IJ26, IJ27, The nozzle firing IJ28, IJ29, IJ30, is usually IJ31, IJ32, IJ33, performed during a IJ34, IJ36, IJ37, special clearing IJ38, IJ39, IJ40, cycle, after first IJ41, IJ42, IJ43, moving the print IJ44,, IJ45 head to a cleaning station. Extra In systems which Can be Requires Silverbrook, power to heat the ink, but do highly effective higher drive EP 0771 658 A2 ink heater not boil it under if the heater is voltage for and related normal situations, adjacent to the clearing patent nozzle clearing can nozzle May require applications be achieved by larger drive over-powering the transistors heater and boiling ink at the nozzle. Rapid The actuator is Does not Effectiveness May be succession fired in rapid require extra depends used with: IJ01, of succession. In drive circuits on substantially IJ02, IJ03, IJ04, actuator some the print head upon the IJ05, IJ06, IJ07, pulses configurations, this Can be configuration of IJ09, IJ10, IJ11, may cause heat readily the ink jet nozzle IJ14, IJ16, IJ20, build-up at the controlled and IJ22, IJ23, IJ24, nozzle which boils initiated by IJ25, IJ27, IJ28, the ink, clearing digital logic IJ29, IJ30, IJ31, the nozzle. In other IJ32, IJ33, IJ34, situations, it may IJ36, IJ37, IJ38, cause sufficient IJ39, IJ40, IJ41, vibrations to IJ42, IJ43, IJ44, dislodge clogged IJ45 nozzles. Extra Where an actuator A simple Not suitable May be power to is not normally solution where where there is a used with: IJ03, ink driven to the limit applicable hard limit to IJ09, IJ16, IJ20, pushing of its motion, actuator IJ23, IJ24, IJ25, actuator nozzle clearing movement IJ27, IJ29, IJ30, may be assisted by IJ31, IJ32, IJ39, providing an IJ40, IJ41, IJ42, enhanced drive IJ43, IJ44, IJ45 signal to the actuator. Acoustic An ultrasonic A high High IJ08, IJ13, resonance wave is applied to nozzle clearing implementation IJ15, IJ17, IJ18, the ink chamber. capability can be cost if system IJ19, IJ21 This wave is of an achieved does not already appropriate May be include an amplitude and implemented at acoustic actuator frequency to cause very low cost in sufficient force at systems which the nozzle to clear already include blockages. This is acoustic easiest to achieve actuators if the ultrasonic wave is at a resonant frequency of the ink cavity. Nozzle A microfabricated Can clear Accurate Silverbrook, clearing plate is pushed severely clogged mechanical EP 0771 658 A2 plate against the nozzles alignment is and related nozzles. The plate required patent has a post for Moving applications every nozzle. A parts are post moves required through each There is nozzle, displacing risk of damage dried ink. to the nozzles Accurate fabrication is required Ink The pressure of the May be Requires May be pressure ink is temporarily effective where pressure pump used with all IJ pulse increased so that other methods or other pressure series ink jets ink streams from cannot be used actuator all of the nozzles. Expensive This may be used Wasteful of in conjunction ink with actuator energizing. Print A flexible ‘blade’ Effective Difficult to Many ink head is wiped across the for planar print use if print head jet systems wiper print head surface. head surfaces surface is non- The blade is Low cost planar or very usually fabricated fragile from a flexible Requires polymer, e.g. mechanical parts rubber or synthetic Blade can elastomer. wear out in high volume print systems Separate A separate heater Can be Fabrication Can be used ink is provided at the effective where complexity with many IJ boiling nozzle although other nozzle series ink jets heater the normal drop e-ection clearing methods mechanism cannot be used does not require it. Can be The heaters do not implemented at require individual no additional drive circuits, as cost in some ink many nozzles can jet be cleared configurations simultaneously, and no imaging is required. NOZZLE PLATE CONSTRUCTION Electroformed A nozzle plate Fabrication High Hewlett nickel is separately simplicity temperatures and Packard Thermal fabricated from pressures are Ink jet electroformed required to bond nickel, and nozzle plate bonded to the Minimum print head chip. thickness constraints Differential thermal expansion Laser Individual No masks Each hole Canon ablated or nozzle holes are required must be Bubblejet drilled ablated by an Can be individually 1988 Sercel polymer intense UV quite fast formed et al., SPIE, Vol. laser in a nozzle Some Special 998 Excimer plate, which is control over equipment Beam typically a nozzle profile is required Applications, pp. polymer such as possible Slow where 76-83 polyimide or Equipment there are many 1993 polysulphone required is thousands of Watanabe et al., relatively low nozzles per print U.S. Pat. No. cost head 5,208,604 May produce thin burrs at exit holes Silicon A separate High Two part K. Bean, micromachined nozzle plate is accuracy is construction IEEE micromachined attainable High cost Transactions on from single Requires Electron crystal silicon, precision Devices, Vol. and bonded to alignment ED-25, No. 10, the print head Nozzles 1978 pp 1185-1195 wafer. may be clogged Xerox 1990 by adhesive Hawkins et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,899,181 Glass Fine glass No Very small 1970 Zoltan capillaries capillaries are expensive nozzle sizes are U.S. Pat. No. drawn from equipment difficult to form 3,683,212 glass tubing. required Not suited This method Simple to for mass has been used make single production for making nozzles individual nozzles, but is difficult to use for bulk manufacturing of print heads with thousands of nozzles. Monolithic, The nozzle High Requires Silverbrook, surface plate is accuracy (<1 μm) sacrificial layer EP 0771 658 A2 micromachined deposited as a Monolithic under the nozzle and related using VLSI layer using Low cost plate to form the patent lithographic standard VLSI Existing nozzle chamber applications processes deposition processes can be Surface IJ01, IJ02, techniques. used may be fragile to IJ04, IJ11, IJ12, Nozzles are the touch IJ17, IJ18, IJ20, etched in the IJ22, IJ24, IJ27, nozzle plate IJ28, IJ29, IJ30, using VLSI IJ31, IJ32, IJ33, lithography and IJ34, IJ36, IJ37, etching. IJ38, IJ39, IJ40, IJ41, IJ42, IJ43, IJ44 Monolithic, The nozzle High Requires IJ03, IJ05, etched plate is a buried accuracy (<1 μm) long etch times IJ06, IJ07, IJ08, through etch stop in the Monolithic Requires a IJ09, IJ10, IJ13, substrate wafer. Nozzle Low cost support wafer IJ14, IJ15, IJ16, chambers are No IJ19, IJ21, IJ23, etched in the differential IJ25, IJ26 front of the expansion wafer, and the wafer is thinned from the back side. Nozzles are then etched in the etch stop layer. No nozzle Various No nozzles Difficult to Ricoh 1995 plate methods have to become control drop Sekiya et al been tried to clogged position U.S. Pat. No. eliminate the accurately 5,412,413 nozzles entirely, Crosstalk 1993 to prevent problems Hadimioglu et al nozzle EUP 550,192 clogging. These 1993 Elrod include thermal et al EUP 572,220 bubble mechanisms and acoustic lens mechanisms Trough Each drop Reduced Drop firing IJ35 ejector has a manufacturing direction is trough through complexity sensitive to which a paddle Monolithic wicking. moves. There is no nozzle plate. Nozzle slit The elimination No nozzles Difficult to 1989 Saito instead of of nozzle holes to become control drop et al U.S. Pat. No. individual and replacement clogged position 4,799,068 nozzles by a slit accurately encompassing Crosstalk many actuator problems positions reduces nozzle clogging, but increases crosstalk due to ink surface waves DROP EJECTION DIRECTION Edge Ink flow is Simple Nozzles Canon (‘edge along the construction limited to edge Bubblejet 1979 shooter’ surface of the No silicon High Endo et al GB chip, and ink etching required resolution is patent 2,007,162 drops are Good heat difficult Xerox ejected from the sinking via Fast color heater-in-pit chip edge. substrate printing requires 1990 Hawkins et Mechanically one print head al U.S. Pat. No. strong per color 4,899,181 Ease of chip Tone-jet handing Surface Ink flow is No bulk Maximum Hewlett- (‘roof along the silicon etching ink flow is Packard TIJ shooter’) surface of the required severely 1982 Vaught et chip, and ink Silicon can restricted al U.S. Pat. No. drops are make an 4,490,728 ejected from the effective heat IJ02, IJ11, chip surface, sink IJ12, IJ20, IJ22 normal to the Mechanical plane of the strength chip. Through Ink flow is High ink Requires Silverbrook, chip, through the flow bulk silicon EP 0771 658 A2 forward chip, and ink Suitable for etching and related (‘up drops are pagewidth print patent shooter’) ejected from the heads applications front surface of High nozzle IJ04, IJ17, the chip. packing density IJ18, IJ24, IJ27-IJ45 therefore low manufacturing cost Through Ink flow is High ink Requires IJ01, IJ03, chip, reverse through the flow wafer thinning IJ05, IJ06, IJ07, (‘down chip, and ink Suitable for Requires IJ08, IJ09, IJ10, shooter’) drops are pagewidth print special handling IJ13, IJ14, IJ15, ejected from the heads during IJ16, IJ19, IJ21, rear surface of High nozzle manufacture IJ23, IJ25, IJ26 the chip. packing density therefore low manufacturing cost Through Ink flow is Suitable for Pagewidth Epson actuator through the piezoelectric print heads Stylus actuator, which print heads require several Tektronix is not fabricated thousand hot melt as part of the connections to piezoelectric ink same substrate drive circuits jets as the drive Cannot be transistors. manufactured in standard CMOS fabs Complex assembly required INK TYPE Aqueous, Water based ink Environmentally Slow drying Most dye which typically friendly Corrosive existing ink jets contains: water, No odor Bleeds on All IJ series dye, surfactant, paper ink jets humectant, and May Silverbrook, biocide. strikethrough EP 0771 658 A2 Modern ink dyes Cockles and related have high water- paper patent fastness, light applications fastness Aqueous, Water based ink Environmentally Slow drying IJ02, IJ04, pigment which typically friendly Corrosive IJ21, IJ26, IJ27, contains: water, No odor Pigment IJ30 pigment, Reduced may clog Silverbrook, surfactant, bleed nozzles EP 0771 658 A2 humectant, and Reduced Pigment and related biocide. wicking may clog patent Pigments have an Reduced actuator applications advantage in strikethrough mechanisms Piezoelectric reduced bleed, Cockles ink-jets wicking and paper Thermal ink strikethrough. jets (with significant restrictions) Methyl MEK is a highly Very fast Odorous All IJ series Ethyl volatile solvent drying Flammable ink jets Ketone used for industrial Prints on (MEK) printing on various difficult surfaces substrates such such as aluminum as metals and cans. plastics Alcohol Alcohol based inks Fast drying Slight odor All IJ series (ethanol, can be used where Operates at Flammable ink jets 2-butanol, the printer must sub-freezing and operate at temperatures others) temperatures Reduced below the freezing paper cockle point of water. An Low cost example of this is in-camera consumer photographic printing. Phase The ink is solid at No drying High Tektronix change room temperature, time-ink viscosity hot melt (hot melt) and is melted in instantly freezes Printed ink piezoelectric ink the print head on the print typically has a jets before jetting. Hot medium ‘waxy’ feel 1989 melt inks are Almost any Printed Nowak U.S. Pat. No. usually wax based, print medium pages may 4,820,346 with a melting can be used ‘block’ All IJ series point around 80° C. No paper Ink ink jets After jetting cockle occurs temperature may the ink freezes No wicking be above the almost instantly occurs curie point of upon contacting No bleed permanent the print medium occurs magnets or a transfer roller. No Ink heaters strikethrough consume power occurs Long warm- up time Oil Oil based inks are High High All IJ series extensively used in solubility viscosity: this is ink jets offset printing. medium for a significant They have some dyes limitation for use advantages in Does not in ink jets, which improved cockle paper usually require a characteristics on Does not low viscosity. paper (especially wick through Some short no wicking or paper chain and multi- cockle). Oil branched oils soluble dies and have a pigments are sufficiently low required. viscosity. Slow drying Microemulsion A microemulsion Stops ink Viscosity All IJ series is a stable, self bleed higher than ink jets forming emulsion High dye water of oil, water, and solubility Cost is surfactant. The Water, oil, slightly higher characteristic drop and amphiphilic than water based size is less than soluble dies can ink 100 nm, and is be used High determined by the Can surfactant preferred curvature stabilize pigment concentration of the surfactant. suspensions required (around 5%) 

1. A camera for creating a manipulated image comprising: (a) an image capture device adapted to capture a captured image; (b) an input device adapted to receive an input image; (c) an image manipulator adapted to receive the input image from the input device and to manipulate the input image to form a manipulated image; (d) an output device adapted to receive the manipulated image from the image manipulator and to output the manipulated image; (e) a display device adapted to receive the manipulated image from the image manipulator and to display the manipulated image; and (f) an instruction reader adapted to read at least one image manipulation instruction disposed in or on a manipulation instruction printed medium, the instruction reader being adapted to provide the at least one image manipulation instruction to the image manipulator, the image manipulator being adapted to manipulate the captured image to form the manipulated image in response to receiving the at least one image manipulation instruction.
 2. The camera of claim 1 wherein the image manipulator is adapted to manipulate the input image by combining at least part of the input image with at least part of the captured image to form the manipulated image.
 3. The camera of claim 1 wherein the input device comprises one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal receiver adapted to receive one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 4. The camera of claim 1 wherein the output device comprises one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal transmitter adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 5. The camera of claim 1 wherein the display device comprises a printer device built into the camera.
 6. The camera of claim 1 wherein the printer device comprises a page-width inkjet-type printhead.
 7. The camera of claim 1 wherein the instruction reader is further adapted to read the at least one image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the manipulation instruction printed medium in encoded form.
 8. A camera system for creating a manipulated image comprising: (a) a primary camera comprising: (i) a primary image capture device adapted to capture a primary captured image; (ii) a primary image manipulator adapted to manipulate the primary captured image to form a primary manipulated image; (iii) a primary instruction reader adapted to read at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on a primary manipulation instruction printed medium, the primary instruction reader being adapted to provide the at least one primary image manipulation instruction to the primary image manipulator, the primary image manipulator being adapted to manipulate the primary captured image to form the primary manipulated image in response to receiving the at least one primary image manipulation instruction; and (iv) a primary image provider adapted to receive the primary manipulated image from the primary image manipulator and to provide the primary manipulated image to a secondary camera; and (b) a secondary camera comprising: (i) a secondary image capture device adapted to capture a secondary captured image; (ii) an image receiver adapted to receive the primary manipulated image from the primary camera; and (iii) a secondary image manipulator adapted to receive the primary manipulated image from the image receiver and to manipulate the primary manipulated image to form a secondary manipulated image.
 9. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a secondary image provider adapted to receive the secondary manipulated image from the secondary image manipulator and to provide the secondary manipulated image to a further camera.
 10. The camera system of claim 9 wherein the secondary image provider comprises one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal transmitter adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 11. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the primary image provider comprises one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal transmitter adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 12. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the image receiver of the secondary camera comprises one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal receiver adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 13. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the secondary image manipulator is adapted to manipulate the primary manipulated image by combining at least part of the secondary captured image with at least part of the primary manipulated image to form the secondary manipulated image.
 14. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a printer device built into the secondary camera.
 15. The camera system of claim 14 wherein the printer device comprises a page-width inkjet-type printhead.
 16. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the primary instruction reader is further adapted to read the at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the primary manipulation instruction printed medium in encoded form.
 17. The camera system of claim 8 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a secondary instruction reader adapted to read at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on a secondary manipulation instruction printed medium, the secondary instruction reader being adapted to provide the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction to the secondary image manipulator, the secondary image manipulator being adapted to manipulate the primary manipulated image to form the secondary manipulated image in response to receiving the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction.
 18. The camera system of claim 17 wherein the secondary instruction reader is further adapted to read the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the secondary manipulation instruction printed medium in encoded form.
 19. A method for forming a manipulated image using a primary camera and a secondary camera, the primary camera comprising a primary image capture device, a primary image manipulator, a primary instruction reader adapted to read at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on a primary manipulation instruction medium, and a primary image provider, the secondary camera comprising a secondary image capture device, a secondary image receiver and a secondary image manipulator, the method comprising the steps of, in the primary camera: (a) capturing a primary captured image using the primary image capture device; (b) manipulating the primary captured image using the primary image manipulator to form a primary manipulated image comprising: (i) reading, using the primary instruction reader, the at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the primary manipulation instruction printed medium; (ii) providing the at least one primary image manipulation instruction to the primary image manipulator; and (iii) manipulating the primary captured image, using the primary image manipulator and in accordance with the at least one primary image manipulation instruction, to form the primary manipulated image; and (c) providing the primary manipulated image to a secondary camera via the primary image provider, and, in the secondary camera: (d) receiving the primary manipulated image from the primary camera via the secondary image receiver; and (e) manipulating the primary manipulated image using the secondary image manipulator to form a secondary manipulated image.
 20. The method of claim 19 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a secondary image provider and wherein the method further comprises the step of, in the secondary camera, providing the secondary manipulated image to a further camera via the secondary image provider.
 21. The method of claim 20 wherein the step of providing the secondary manipulated image to a further camera via the secondary image provider comprises providing the secondary manipulated image to a further camera via one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal transmitter adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 22. The method of claim 19 wherein the step of providing the primary manipulated image to a secondary camera via the primary image provider comprises providing the primary manipulated image to a secondary camera via one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal transmitter adapted to transmit one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 23. The method of claim 19 wherein the step of receiving the primary manipulated image from the primary camera via the secondary image receiver comprises receiving the primary manipulated image from the primary camera via one or more of the following: (a) a USB port; (b) a serial port; and (c) an electromagnetic signal receiver adapted to receive one or more of radio, optical, infra-red and Bluetooth signals.
 24. The method of claim 19 further comprising the step of, in the secondary camera: capturing a secondary captured image using the secondary image capture device, and wherein the step of manipulating the primary manipulated image using the secondary image manipulator to form the secondary manipulated image comprises: manipulating, using the secondary image manipulator, the primary manipulated image by combining at least part of the secondary captured image with at least part of the primary manipulated image to form the secondary manipulated image.
 25. The method of claim 19 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a printer device built in to the secondary camera, and wherein the step of manipulating the primary manipulated image using the secondary image manipulator to form a secondary manipulated image is followed by the step of printing the secondary manipulated image using the printer device.
 26. The method of claim 19 wherein the step of printing the secondary manipulated image using the printer device comprises printing the secondary manipulated image using a page-width inkjet-type printhead.
 27. The method of claim 19 wherein the step of: reading, using the primary instruction reader, the at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the primary manipulation instruction printed medium comprises reading, using the primary instruction reader, the at least one primary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the primary manipulation instruction printed medium in encoded form.
 28. The method of claim 19 wherein the secondary camera further comprises a secondary instruction reader adapted to read at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on a secondary manipulation instruction printed medium, and wherein the step of, in the secondary camera: manipulating the primary manipulated image using the secondary image manipulator to form the secondary manipulated image comprises the steps of: (i) reading, using the secondary instruction reader, the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the secondary manipulation instruction printed medium; (ii) providing the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction to the secondary image manipulator; and (iii) manipulating the primary manipulated image, using the secondary image manipulator and in accordance with the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction, to form the secondary manipulated image.
 29. The method of claim 28 wherein the step of: reading, using the secondary instruction reader, the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the secondary manipulation instruction printed medium comprises reading, using the secondary instruction reader, the at least one secondary image manipulation instruction disposed in or on the secondary manipulation instruction printed medium in encoded form.
 30. A manipulated image formed using the camera as claimed in claim
 1. 31. The manipulated image of claim 30 comprising a printed manipulated image.
 32. A secondary manipulated image formed using the camera system as claimed in claim
 8. 33. The secondary manipulated image of claim 32 comprising a printed secondary manipulated image.
 34. A secondary manipulated image formed by the method as claimed in claim
 19. 35. The secondary manipulated image of claim 34 comprising a printed secondary manipulated image. 